Ewww… Justin Beiber Upchucks on Stage During Concert (Video)

Posted by Jim Hoft on Sunday, September 30, 2012, 6:20 PM

Justin Bieber played the sold-out first show of his “Believe” tour Saturday night (Sept. 29), and fans got a little something extra as well — though probably not what Bieber was hoping to give them.

The 18-year-old pop star vomited on stage midway through his set in Phoenix. As you can see in the video below, during his performance of “Out of Town Girl,” he turns away from the crowd, doubles over and lets fly before running off stage.

He returned a few minutes later but then had to leave the stage again during “Beauty and a Beat,” USA Today reports. The show stopped completely for a few minutes until he returned and confessed his illness. “Will you love me even though I’m throwing up on stage?” he asked the crowd, which of course responded in the affirmative.

donh commented:

This is good for Selena Gomez…Her agent can now renegotiate the contract with Disney to pay out an additional $200,000 to go out on those staged publicity dates with Beiber for the Teen magazines photographs.

Big Red commented:

Look-Out commented:

Lady Mondegreen commented:

Why was this event posted? The poor guy tried to deliver for his paying fans despite being ill and I can’t imagine many more embarrassing situations. He seems to have handled it with humor and grace. Why do you have to ridicule him?

[Army Colonel Mark Fassl was NATO’s Training Mission Afghanistan
Command Inspector General in 2010. He says when he requested
the inspector general to investigate the hospital, he was
admonished by the three-star general in charge, Lt. General William
Caldwell.

“His first response to me was ‘how could we make that request
with elections coming?'” Fassl told a House oversight subcommittee
Tuesday.

Another advisor in Afghanistan, Col. Gerald Carozza, says Caldwell’s
deputy delivered a similar message: that the general was upset that
Fassl had asked for an independent investigation “so close to the
(2010 midterm) election.”

“We were to consider postponing it until afterwards,”
Carozza testified. “It was a stunning moment for me.”

[..]

Col. Schuyler Geller, the former Command Surgeon of the NATO Training
Mission in Afghanistan, told Congress there’s still a lack of accountability
at Dawood Hospital. Doctors and nurses who committed “unspeakable”
acts still “walk the halls of the hospital, unrepentant, unscathed and
unprosecuted,” he told Congress.]